Ant-Mimicking Spiders: Strategies for Living with Social Insects

Mimicry is a fascinating topic, in particular when viewed in terms of selective forces and evolutionary strategies. Mimicry is a system involving a signaller, a signal receiver, and a model and has evolved independently many times in plants and animals. There are several ways of classifying mimicry...

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Main Author: Fadia Sara Ceccarelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2013-01-01
Series:Psyche: A Journal of Entomology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/839181
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author Fadia Sara Ceccarelli
author_facet Fadia Sara Ceccarelli
author_sort Fadia Sara Ceccarelli
collection DOAJ
description Mimicry is a fascinating topic, in particular when viewed in terms of selective forces and evolutionary strategies. Mimicry is a system involving a signaller, a signal receiver, and a model and has evolved independently many times in plants and animals. There are several ways of classifying mimicry based on the interactions and cost-benefit scenarios of the parties involved. In this review, I briefly outline the dynamics of the most common types of mimicry to then apply it to some of the spider-ant associative systems known to date. In addition, this review expands on the strategies that ant-associating (in particular ant-mimicking) spiders have developed to minimise the costs of living close to colonies of potentially dangerous models. The main strategy that has been noted to date is either chemical mimicry or actively avoiding contact with ants. If these strategies warrant protection for the spider (living close to potentially dangerous models), then the benefits of ant associations would outweigh the costs, and the association will prevail.
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publishDate 2013-01-01
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series Psyche: A Journal of Entomology
spelling doaj-art-5c09b5c02edc4dda90e5c7403938d7e62025-02-03T01:29:01ZengWileyPsyche: A Journal of Entomology0033-26151687-74382013-01-01201310.1155/2013/839181839181Ant-Mimicking Spiders: Strategies for Living with Social InsectsFadia Sara Ceccarelli0Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Basel, 4056 Basel, SwitzerlandMimicry is a fascinating topic, in particular when viewed in terms of selective forces and evolutionary strategies. Mimicry is a system involving a signaller, a signal receiver, and a model and has evolved independently many times in plants and animals. There are several ways of classifying mimicry based on the interactions and cost-benefit scenarios of the parties involved. In this review, I briefly outline the dynamics of the most common types of mimicry to then apply it to some of the spider-ant associative systems known to date. In addition, this review expands on the strategies that ant-associating (in particular ant-mimicking) spiders have developed to minimise the costs of living close to colonies of potentially dangerous models. The main strategy that has been noted to date is either chemical mimicry or actively avoiding contact with ants. If these strategies warrant protection for the spider (living close to potentially dangerous models), then the benefits of ant associations would outweigh the costs, and the association will prevail.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/839181
spellingShingle Fadia Sara Ceccarelli
Ant-Mimicking Spiders: Strategies for Living with Social Insects
Psyche: A Journal of Entomology
title Ant-Mimicking Spiders: Strategies for Living with Social Insects
title_full Ant-Mimicking Spiders: Strategies for Living with Social Insects
title_fullStr Ant-Mimicking Spiders: Strategies for Living with Social Insects
title_full_unstemmed Ant-Mimicking Spiders: Strategies for Living with Social Insects
title_short Ant-Mimicking Spiders: Strategies for Living with Social Insects
title_sort ant mimicking spiders strategies for living with social insects
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/839181
work_keys_str_mv AT fadiasaraceccarelli antmimickingspidersstrategiesforlivingwithsocialinsects